Remember, some of the titles have free supplemental guidebooks designed to help you tactically implement everything you learn. You can download them from the same place.

Here’s a look at the required design reading you can download today.

Enterprise Design Sprints

A design sprint provides a simple problem-solving framework for product teams to get quick answers, reduce politics, and increase collaboration across functions. Learn from the world’s best enterprises how you can run, facilitate, or sponsor your own design sprint and start delivering solutions in organizations of any size.

Enterprise Design Sprints Facilitation Guide

Once you’ve read Enterprise Design Sprints, you’ll have a good grasp on how to run a successful design sprint. However, some time will likely pass between reading the book and doing the sprint, making it difficult to remember all the details. This guide is a quick reference to help facilitators keep a sprint on track.

DesignOps Handbook

As companies mature and invest in design, they need to operationalize workflow, team coordination, and more. Learn how DesignOps help create integrated, high-functioning teams at the best companies in the world.

Design Systems Handbook

A design system unites product teams around a common visual language. It reduces design debt, accelerates the design process, and builds bridges between teams working in concert to bring products to life. Learn how to build and maintain a flexible, stable, scalable design system to help your team improve product quality.

DSM Field Guide

Learn how to position your team to start leveraging the full value of design systems in your product design process. It’s not an easy task, but it’s a critical step toward making digital products a long-term competitive advantage for your business.

Design Thinking Handbook

What is design thinking and how can it spread throughout an organization? Learn how design thinking can help your team and company bring insightful, user-driven solutions to even the thorniest challenges.

Eli is the Director of Design Education at InVision. His design career spans both physical and digital products, and he is a lecturer in the Product Design program at Stanford University.
You can find Eli on Medium or on Twitter.